San Francisco Chronicle

A grip on Newton and home-field advantage

- Steve Reed is an Associated Press writer. By Steve Reed

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Drew Brees and the Saints still have one of the league’s top-scoring offenses, but lately it’s the defense that has been carrying the NFL’s most complete team.

On a night when Brees and the offense couldn’t get much going and made uncharacte­ristic mistakes, New Orleans put the clamps on Cam Newton and the Panthers in a 12-9 victory on Monday, moving the Saints into position to secure home-field advantage in the NFC playoffs.

“I believe in us, game in and game out, first quarter to fourth quarter,” said defensive end Cameron Jordan, a Cal alum. “If it comes down to a crucial play, I believe in us.”

The Saints (12-2) held an opponent to 17 points or fewer for a sixth straight game. They limited Newton to 131 yards passing, sacked him four times and forced two turnovers. Carolina (6-8), which lost its sixth straight, had just 247 yards and 13 first downs. The Panthers’ only scores came on a trick play on fourth down and an intercepti­on return on a two-point-conversion try.

“So proud of the defense,” New Orleans head coach Sean Payton said. “I thought they were outstandin­g. It’s tough to win a division game on the road.”

Alvin Kamara had 103 yards from scrimmage and a touchdown, and Brees had 203 yards passing for the Saints, who took a one-game lead in the NFC over the Rams. The Saints close the season at home against Pittsburgh and Carolina; the Rams visit Arizona and host the 49ers.

Newton struggled throwing the ball more than 10 yards downfield because of a lingering sore right shoulder. He said after the game he’s unsure what the injury is, but he mentioned his labrum and rotator cuff as possible issues. He has been limited in practice for weeks and doesn’t have the zip on the ball he normally has.

So much for his boast that the Panthers were bringing a cup to steal the “juice” from the Saints.

Newton “said something along the lines of they brought their own cup, a juice box or something, I don’t know what it was,” Jordan said. “But I do know that he’s got to go back to the refrigerat­or and pull out a bigger cup.”

New Orleans swept three games from the Panthers last season and knocked them out of the playoffs, prompting Jordan to send Newton a bottle of red wine in the offseason, while some other teammates gave him a broom. This loss likely ended Carolina’s playoff hopes again.

Newton said his shoulder isn’t better or worse, but he refused to blame the injury, saying, “I have to be better.”

“Our defense played a hell of a game and we have to reward them,” Newton said. “We had two turnovers in the red zone, and that comes down to execution.”

 ?? Jason E. Miczek / Associated Press ?? New Orleans linebacker Demario Davis celebrates his first-half sack of the Panthers’ Cam Newton, one of four by the Saints.
Jason E. Miczek / Associated Press New Orleans linebacker Demario Davis celebrates his first-half sack of the Panthers’ Cam Newton, one of four by the Saints.

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